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NEWS OF THE WEEK T HE international situation is such, and
The Spectatorthe destinies of so many individual countries are so decisively affected by what has happened in the past week and what may happen in the next few days, that the notes on these...
Poland The calm with which Poland watches the critical situation
The Spectatorin Europe may be ascribed to two causes : first, the confi- dence given by the Anglo-Polish alliance, which is welcomed by all classes ; and, second, the completion of the...
France's Military Precautions France has taken little part in the
The Spectatordiplomatic negotiations arising out of the threat, first to Poland, and secondly to the Balkans ; and it is remarkable to what an extent she has sur- rendered to Britain her old...
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Spanish Rumours In the last week Spain has given rise
The Spectatorto a variety of rumours, some contradictory ; they are serious enough, how- ever, for the French Ambassador, Marshal Petain, to return to Paris to report on the situation to his...
Turkey Of all the Balkan States, Turkey can be counted
The Spectatoron for such collaboration with the greatest certainty ; and both her determination to assist in maintaining peace in the Balkans and her awareness that her control of the...
America's Sympathy The effect of German and Italian brigandage in
The SpectatorEurope on American public opinion has been demonstrated de- cisively, not merely by the comment in the leading papers but by approval openly given by President Roosevelt to one...
Holland's Precautions By an Order-in-Council declaring that the international situation
The Spectatorinvolved the danger of war, Holland's frontier defence units were summoned to their posts on Tuesday. In a broadcast speech the Prime Minister, Dr. Colijn, explained that this...
Greece The immediate effect of Italy's occupation of Albania has
The Spectatorbeen to demonstrate that for the Balkan States only two choices are possible ; and those two choices will not be open for long. Either they must form a collective front against...
Moscow and the Crisis The Government has given repeated assurances
The Spectatorthat it is maintaining the closest contact with the Soviet Union ; but the consultations have by no means dissipated Moscow's suspicions of this country's intentions. The result...
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Unifying the Educational System The plea put forward at the
The Spectatorannual conference of the National Union of Teachers for one code for all schools is one that has the support of most of the educational world. It was the central proposal of the...
Rumania Rumania, however, is threatened by Germany as well as
The SpectatorItaly. The danger is the greater if her negotiations with Great Britain have not gone further than has so far been announced, though at the week-end Rumania's Minister in...
Bulgaria In less critical circumstances the Axis could confi- dently
The Spectatordepend on Bulgaria's co-operation in any attempt to disrupt the Balkan Entente, which in origin at least is an anti-Bulgarian alliance ; while Bulgaria's Hohenzollern tradi-...
Grants for the Territorials The generous assistance which the Territorial
The SpectatorAssociations are to receive from the War Office is a necessary corollary to the decision to double the numbers. To initiate the new publicity drive each association has been...
Yugoslavia The fourth party to the Balkan Entente, Yugoslavia, is
The Spectatorequally threatened by Italy's action. A captive in the Adriatic, she is exposed to attack on the north and the south, though, like Greece, she has received emphatic assurances...
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THE ANSWER TO MUSSOLINI
The SpectatorW RITTEN, as it necessarily must be, before the Prime Minister':; statement in Parliament is made, this article cannot deal with the British Cabinet's considered decisions...
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DEBITS AND CREDITS T HE sharp turn in English foreign policy
The Spectatorhas a 1. deeper foundation than expediency. It has been possible because the rape of Czecho-Slovakia, like the invasion of Belgium in 1914, has quickened the moral pulse of...
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Listeners to Raymond Gram Swing's broadcast from the United States
The Spectatoron Saturday evening heard Mr. Swing describe pointedly how Marian Anderson, the well-known coloured soprano, was, on account of her negro blood, refused leave by the Daughters...
The newest political departuieâon which its authors are to be
The Spectatorcordially congratulated, is French Without Tears for M.P.s. The sponsor of the plan is the Anglo-French Parlia- mentary Committee, which finds that a number of its members,...
* * * * I mentioned a few weeks ago
The Spectatorthe growing vogue of news- letters, representing in most cases some single individual's views on things in general. Since then the flow has become a flood, and at least a dozen...
Does the new Earl of Huntingdon (Francis John Clarence Westenra
The SpectatorPlantagenet Hastings) become the first Communist member of the House of Lords on the death of his father, which took place last week? That depends on whether he does, in fact,...
An interesting strategical comment reaches me from an aeronautical correspondent.
The SpectatorGermany's seizure of the Ukraine is, of course, one of the main objectives outlined in Mein Kampf, and there is no reason to suppose that Herr Hitler has abandoned it. But there...
A SPECTATOR'S NOTEBOOK
The SpectatorA GOOD deal might be said about the Stanhope episode of a week ago, and much of it is better left unsaid. But the Portsmouth speech has at least drawn attention to the fact that...
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ITALY'S REAL OBJECTIVE
The SpectatorBy JOSEPH SW1RE I their heroic struggle to preserve their independence 1 through the centuries the Albanian people have been handicapped by one grave disadvantage. It is that...
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RUSSIA'S SUSPICIONS
The SpectatorBy WALTER DURANTY IT is idle to deny that the attitude of Soviet Russia towards Mr. Chamberlainâand for that matter towards Poland itselfâis one of scepticism verging on...
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GERMANY AND ITS " LEBENSRAUM "
The SpectatorBy A BERLIN CORRESPONDENT T HE British guarantee to Poland has caused far less anxiety here in Berlin than is probably realised abroad. Very few people doubt that it served as...
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THE RUMANO-GERMAN TREATY
The SpectatorBy ELIZABETH WISKEMANN Bucares t. T HOUGH Rumania's frontiers nowhere touch those of Germany even today, her independence has been seriously shaken by the destruction of...
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ARE STATISTICIANS LIARS ?
The SpectatorBy MARGARET KNIGHT T IARS, as we have all heard, are of three grades: liars, 1 4 damned liars, and statisticiansâa gross libel on a harm- less and necessary class....
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CAMPS GOOD AND BAD
The SpectatorBy SIR RONALD DAVISON A FORTNIGHT ago The Spectator allowed me to des- cribe the Government's new Camps Bill and to discuss its potentialities both for peace and war. This...
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A DAY WITH WILLIAM PALMER
The SpectatorBy BERNARD DARWIN "M URDER," says the admirable Mr. Roughead, "has a magic of its own, its peculiar alchemy . . . Dull streets become fraught with mystery, commonplace...
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THE GOLOSH
The SpectatorBy MICHAEL ZOSHCHENKO I T isn't really di ffi cult to lose a golosh on a tram. Especially if other passengers push you from side to side, and if some clumsy devil treads on...
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To be optimistic at such a moment is a proof
The Spectatoreither of ignorance or cowardice. The rape of Albania gives to Italy a fortified base at Valona and the keys of the Adriatic. Once established in the country, Italy will be only...
Dr. BOttiger's article is an interesting illustration of the methods
The Spectatorand standards of Nazi journalism. He begins by confusing my father with Sir " Eric " Crowe, an error which could not have been committed by any educated German correspondent...
For the moment, however (I write this on Tuesday), the
The Spectatorspotlight has been concentrated upon the Italian end of the axis. One would have supposed that even the most die- hard optimist would now have realised that the Anti- Comintern...
After reading Erika Mann's analysis I sought among my pamphlets
The Spectatorfor a copy of her father's open letter to the Dean of the Philosophical Faculty at Bonn. I find that many people have never come across that magnificent indictment. I may...
I have been reading this week a striking book by
The SpectatorErika Mann, entitled School for Barbarians, in which she describes the conditioning of the rising German generation. Her argument is that the German child today is being torn...
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THE CINEMA
The Spectator" Hotel Imperial." At the Plaza - " The Three Musketeers.' At the Regal. PERHAPS it is because I associate the name Miranda with an old family donkey which used to take the...
STAGE AND SCREEN
The SpectatorMUSIC An Open Letter to a Pianist DEAR MISS BLANK,âAlthough your supposition that I am " overwhelmed by the protests of injured artists " has little real basis, I none the...
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In the Garden In Queen Mary's garden in Regent's Park
The Spectatorduring Easter week the craft of pruning roses was demonstrated to many observers. March is the best month for the pruning of most roses, though it is best to wait for April in...
Fox and Lamb In quite another part of England an
The Spectatorobserver noticed that the shepherd had put all the ewes which had borne twins in one enclosure, apart from those that had only one lamb. No particular reason was vouchsafed, but...
Old Trees
The SpectatorThere is one other spectacle that must be set against the general charm of the districtâagainst the daffodils that here flourish surprisingly more in the woods than in the...
COUNTRY LIFE
The SpectatorSussex Woods Some of the most beautiful and, indeed, most English walks within Britain, especially at Eastertide, are to be found along the northern edge of the South Downs in...
Suburban Duck The general decrease of wild duck, in the
The Spectatorfullest sense of the word, is greatly agitating sportsmen and, in a less degree, ornithologists. Protective legislation is intended ; and if it takes the form of prohibiting the...
More Cook-gardeners
The SpectatorA not too serious suggestion was made last year on this page that country dwellers should encourage the multiplication of cook-gardeners or gardening cooks. After all, the final...
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THE GOVERNMENT'S INFORMATION
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, Most of us who have belonged to the Collective Security front are now too concerned with the future to waste time in crying " I told you...
ALBANIA AND AFTER [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, â A
The Spectatorfew years ago I witnessed a football match at Highbury Stadium between a representative team from Italy and an English team. During the match the Italians broke every known rule...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
The Spectator[Correspondents are requested to keep their letters as brief as is reasonably possible. Signed letters are given a preference over those bearing a pseudonym, and the latter must...
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THE SURREY REFUGEES
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,âLast December, Janus, in " A Spectator's Notebook," made several references to the needs of the Sudeten refugees in Surrey, mentioning...
DE QUOI S'AGIT IL?
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sta,âWe stand on' the edge of the precipice which is War. We must therefore look with narrowed vision to the strategy and the instruments...
THE GOVERNMENT AND THE PUBLIC
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR,âThis letter may seem ungracious now that our rulers have at last risen to the occasion, but far too many of us still imagine we have...
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TRAINING THE UNEMPLOYED
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sm,âMr. Needham's letter in your issue of April 7th shows that his trouble is ignorance of what he writes about so freely. The classes to...
SELECTED PREDICTIONS
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sm,âUnlike your reviewer, I do not rub my eyes when I read that Lord Rothermere states that he is prepared to believe in Hitler's...
LAST WORDS TO MR. FLEMING
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] SIR, âTo conclude an unpleasant discussion, I beg to be allowed to express a natural regret that Mt. Fleming does not apply to himself his...
PAPERS FOR GERMANY
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sra,âIn a letter in your paper of March 24th, Mr. F. J. Erroll tells us to send papers to friends in Germany. I was specially warned not to...
A.R.P.
The Spectator[To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sia,âYour article of March 31st on " A.R.P. Half-Measures " is the most vague, unfair and mischievous I have yet seen in any paper, and is...
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ADOLF HITLER
The Spectator[Von einem deutschen Korrespondentenj FUNFZIG JAHRE ADOLF HITLER, davon die grOssere Halfte in Not, Krieg, Bilrgerkrieg und im Scheinwerferlicht der europaischen Oeffentlichkeit...
4, JUDAS " [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] Sia,âIn
The Spectatorthe general way an author must accept in silence the condemnation of unfriendly critics, and find what consola- tion he can in his knowledge that a human being's capacity for...
AN1 I-COMINTERN SPAIN [To the Editor of THE SPECTATOR] StR,âAs
The Spectatora contribution to the present international situation, General Franco's proposed signature to the Anti-Comintern Pact has little significance. Spain is already a German vassal...
A MATTER OF VOCABULARY
The Spectator" The first man who called the conquest [of India] the rape [of India] was original, if a fool. The hundredth is merely a fool." I am wondering by what name I ought to call the...
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BOOKS OF THE DAY
The SpectatorLord Haldane (The Marquess of Crewe, K.G.) Gibraltar and the Mediterranean (Prof. E. H. Carr) . Man or Leviathan? (Henry W. Nevinson) America Now (D. W. Brogan) . . . The...
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GIBRALTAR
The SpectatorGibraltar and the Mediterranean. By G. T. Garratt. (Cape. ros. 6d.) Tuts Iok falls into two equal and opposite parts : a clear, painstaking, cautious and unsensational history...
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AMERICAN STOCKTAKING
The SpectatorAmerica Now : An Inquiry Into Civilisation in the United States. By Thirty - six Americans. Edited with an Intro- duction by Harold E. Stearns. (Scribner. I2S. 6d.) IN 1922 Mr....
THE SOUL OR THE STATE
The SpectatorTo most readers Mr. Mousley is probably best knoidn as the author of those two excellent war-books, The Secrets of a Kuttite and Blow Bugles Blow. He is known as an imagina-...
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THE ANATOMY OF THE TARIFF IN The British Tariff System
The SpectatorMr. McGuire aims "to provide a comprehensive description of the protectionist system that has for some years been in force in Great Britain." A praise- worthy aim ; for quite...
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THE REFORMATION AGAIN
The SpectatorThe Origins of the Reformation. By James Mackinnon. (Longmans. i6s.) YET another book about the Reformation ! One would have thought that we had quite enough, or rather too...
MEXICO
The SpectatorNOBODY can really write about " Mexico." Mr. Marett spent seven years there, Mr. Gallop three, and at no important point do their impressions coincideâthey might be describing...
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THE IRISH LANGUAGE
The SpectatorThe Sword of Light. By Desmond Ryan. (Arthur Barker. 12s. 6d.) THE purpose of Mr. Ryan's book is to give an account of the struggles to save Irish language and culture that have...
SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY
The SpectatorProbability, Statistics and Truth. By Richard von Mises. (William Hodge. los. 6cL) IT has always been the function of philosophers to criticise and interpret the methods and...
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SOMEWHERE IN SHANSI
The SpectatorNorth China Front. By James Bertram. (Macmillan. 15s.) MR. BERTRAM is something more than the first Englishman to shake hands with the Commander-in-Chief of the 8th Route...
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FICTION
The SpectatorBy KATE O'BRIEN Tuts week's novels come to us, three from America and one from Ireland, countries whence various critics, according to their bias, are inclined to think the...
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MOTORING
The SpectatorThe Lords' Road Report No official statement on the endless problem of the pre- vention of road accidents has yet been made to compare in lucidity and general common sense with...
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FINANCE AND INVESTMENT
The SpectatorBy CUSTOS IT says a good deal not merely for the technical strength of stock markets but for the morale of investors that this week's political developments have produced only...
CABLE AND WIRELESS DIVIDEND
The SpectatorHaving written hopefully of the prospects of Cable and Wireless (Holdings) I will not pretend to be surprised that the 4 per cent. dividend is maintained. Once or twice in...
A HIGH YIELD
The SpectatorSo far as Cable and Wireless (Holdings) is concerned, the gross receipts from the operating company would appear to be reduced from Li,o5o,000 to L890,500, or by £159,500. In...
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CHEAPENING ELECTRICITY
The SpectatorTo justify its position as a State-instituted semi-monopoly the Central Electricity Board has, of course, to do more than earn a profit and secure the position of its...
FINANCIAL NOTES
The SpectatorGRID'S STRIKING PROGRESS THE Central Electricity Board occupy the position of whole- sale distributors of electricity in this country, owning the " grid " and transmitting the...
BRITISH OXYGEN PROGRESS
The SpectatorIt is good to see such a progressive undertaking as British Oxygen bringing its accounting methods into line with its splendid technical achievements by issuing a statement of...
EQUITY AND LAW LIFE ASSURANCE The Equity and Law Life
The SpectatorAssurance Society is one of those institutions which have expanded very rapidly in the last fe n' years. In 1932 it was a comparatively small institution, with total funds of...
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Photography
The SpectatorWHAT DO WE OWE TO PHOTOGRAPHY ? By W. R. AYLING WHEN the amateur takes his (and may I include her?) camera for an outing, numerous others do likewise, and noting the pro-...
SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD No. 5 SOLUTION NEXT WEEK The winner
The Spectatorof The Spectator Crossword No. 5 (Second Series) is Mr. N. E. F. Corbett, Orchard Cottage, Fetcham. Surrey.
THE SPECTATOR " CROSSWORD SECOND SERIES-No. 6
The Spectator[A prize of a Book Token for one guinea will be given to the sender of the first correct solution of this week's crossword puzzle to be opened. Envelopes should be marked...